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Source: Alcohol Clinical and Experimental Research
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Jurinsky, Jordan
Christie-Mizell, C. André
Variation by Race/Ethnicity-Gender in the Relationship Between Arrest History and Alcohol Use
Alcohol Clinical and Experimental Research published online (07 March 2024).
Also: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acer.15285
Cohort(s): NLSY97
Publisher: Wiley Online
Keyword(s): Alcohol Use; Alcohol Use, Impact on Health; Arrests; Criminal Justice System; Health Behaviors; Race/Ethnicity

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

Background: Alcohol use contributes to the national burden of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Arrest, as a unique form of criminal justice system involvement, may be related to alcohol use from adolescence to adulthood. This study investigates the relationship between arrest and alcohol use across race/ethnicity-gender (R/E-G) status (e.g., Black, Latinx, and White men and women) as youth age.

Methods: Data from 17 waves (1997–2015) of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1997 cohort (N = 8901) were used to explore how variation in R/E-G moderates the relationship between arrest history and alcohol use trajectories from 13 to 30 years old. Multilevel zero-inflated Poisson and Poisson regression were used to assess R/E-G variation in the relationship between arrest history and days of alcohol consumption, drinks per drinking occasion, and days of binge drinking after accounting for covariates, including incarceration.

Results: The findings indicate that an arrest history is associated with alcohol use, and these results varied by R/E-G status, age, and alcohol use outcome. Those with an arrest history reported more days of drinking than their counterparts without an arrest; yet, the magnitude and direction of average drinks per occasion and binge drinking days varied by R/E-G status and age. Paradoxically, Black men, Black women, and Latinx men with an arrest history reported fewer days of binge drinking as they aged than their counterparts without an arrest.

Conclusions: A history of arrest is important for alcohol use from adolescence to adulthood and varies by R/E-G status, age, and alcohol use outcome. This work confirms previous scholarship showing that arrest and alcohol use are socially patterned and R/E-G status is an essential consideration in understanding the relationship. Future work should include additional identities and health behaviors and the consequences related to alcohol use outcomes.

Bibliography Citation
Jurinsky, Jordan and C. André Christie-Mizell. "Variation by Race/Ethnicity-Gender in the Relationship Between Arrest History and Alcohol Use." Alcohol Clinical and Experimental Research published online (07 March 2024).